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The politics of patrolling 'safety guards' in Sweden: outsourcing, depoliticization, and immunization
Umeå University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Epidemiology and Global Health.ORCID iD: 0000-0003-4761-4141
2023 (English)In: Critical Policy Studies, ISSN 1946-0171, E-ISSN 1946-018X, Vol. 17, no 4, p. 619-636Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The contracting of private guards to patrol public spaces has rapidly become a widespread approach to increase public safety and prevent crime in Swedish municipalities. Drawing on interviews and policy materials from three municipalities, this paper examines how private patrolling guards has become a solution to (un)safety in Sweden, and the political implications of this development. The governmentality analysis shows how the rendering of (un)safety as technical and governable depoliticizes safety by detaching it from its social and political connotations. At the same time, in the process of demarcating the space to be 'guarded,' safety is problematized as a matter of order and sameness in public space, which (re)produces racialized boundaries between those to be made safe and those considered threatening safety. The study further demonstrates how the outsourcing of responsibility for public safety to the security industry is bringing about a shift in democratic legitimacy, accountability, and the monopoly on the use of force, largely without political contestation in the studied municipalities. The paper concludes by discussing the underlying rationale of this practice of governing (un)safety as informed by a biopolitical logic of immunization: safeguarding and immunizing some, at the expense of those marked as risky 'others'.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Routledge, 2023. Vol. 17, no 4, p. 619-636
Keywords [en]
Public safety, security guards, patrolling, private policing, governmentality, depoliticization
National Category
Public Administration Studies
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-193508DOI: 10.1080/19460171.2023.2182334ISI: 000941226800001Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85149389329OAI: oai:DiVA.org:umu-193508DiVA, id: diva2:1649888
Funder
Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation, 2012.0211
Note

Originally included in thesis in manuscript form.

Available from: 2022-04-05 Created: 2022-04-05 Last updated: 2025-02-21Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. In the name of safety: power, politics and the constitutive effects of local governing practices in Sweden
Open this publication in new window or tab >>In the name of safety: power, politics and the constitutive effects of local governing practices in Sweden
2022 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Alternative title[sv]
För trygghet : makt, politik och styrning i svenska kommuners trygghetspraktiker
Abstract [en]

In a time of uncertainty and risk, safety has become an increasingly significant concern. In Sweden, a powerful discourse around public safety has developed in recent years, moving it to the top of the political agenda. While safety is often regarded as a prerequisite for a democratic and gender-equal society in Sweden, previous research demonstrates that safety is increasingly linked in public politics to matters of national and individual security, crime, and immigration. Considering this discursive change in relation to the neoliberal transformation of the Swedish welfare state, the centrality of public safety as a political ideal in Sweden raises questions. Why is safety increasingly seen as a self-evident answer to a range of societal issues in Sweden? Why safety, rather than equality, democracy, or justice?

Drawing upon a governmentality framework, this thesis examines how, and with what effects, safety is being discursively produced as a political problem in Sweden and how it operates as a practice of governmentality. Three widespread practices of governing safety in Swedish municipalities are examined: community-based safety walks; the safety certification of city centers; and the contracting of private guards to patrol public spaces. The study applies a political ethnography approach and is based on policy materials, observations, and interviews. 

The overall analysis of these case studies combines to demonstrate that a technical, calculable, and depoliticized representation of safety is produced. Thus, safety is largely reduced to a set of technical details to be measured, fitted into a protocol, ticked off a checklist, or fixed by making changes to the physical environment. This enables the commodification of safety, manifested in the branding of cities as safe and the outsourcing of responsibility for safety to the private security industry. In this context, safety largely becomes a matter of order and uniformity in public space, while those deviating from these normative ideals are marked as unsafety problems. The various societal issues being addressed as “unsafety problems” are in turn marked as individual or community failures. In effect, these issues are detached from their social and political circumstances and understood as problematic primarily due to causing unsafety to others. The analysis shows how the governing of safety in this manner produces a boundary between the familiar, “Swedish”, “us”—to be made safe in public space—and the estranged, “non-Swedish”, “others,” who are marked as problematic and out of place. However, these exclusions are concealed by the depoliticized representation of safety as a technical matter as well as a virtue.

The thesis shows how these deeply political acts of deciding who is legitimate or illegitimate in our public spaces, and how altering dimensions of democratic accountability and the monopoly on using force, are enacted through the government of safety as a set of technicalities, largely without political contestation. While safety is often put forward as a democratic tool of inclusion and access to public space, the thesis claims that the government of safety operates through a de-democratizing dynamic of governmental precarization. This means that, despite the centrality of safety as a political ideal, the politics of safety neither challenges nor changes, but rather reproduces and reinforces, prevailing relations of power and the current political order of things. Shadowed by our own demands for safety, we fail to recognize that this order both (re)produces and relies upon a state of unsafety.  

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Umeå: Umeå universitet, 2022. p. 105
Series
Statsvetenskapliga institutionens skriftserie, ISSN 0349-0831 ; 2022:1
Keywords
Safety, unsafety, governmentality, political ethnography, public space, safety walks, participation, community, certification, security guards, private security, patrolling, Sweden
National Category
Public Administration Studies
Research subject
political science; gender studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-193513 (URN)978-91-7855-759-2 (ISBN)978-91-7855-760-8 (ISBN)
Public defence
2022-04-29, Aula Biologica, Umeå, 13:15 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Funder
Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation, MMW 2012.0211
Available from: 2022-04-08 Created: 2022-04-05 Last updated: 2025-02-21Bibliographically approved

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